Wednesday, 30 July 2025

Old Trafford

The fourth test from Old Trafford, England made just the one enforced change, I expected the bowling to have been freshened up a bit more?  India shuffled the pack again but crucially Bumrah lead the attack.  England won the toss and bloody bowled again!!  But they did bowl really well without luck and India started sensibly with the bat and by lunch no wickets had fallen, I had that sinking feeling.  After lunch things got a little better with a couple of wickets and India could never score freely.  The day was curtailed by bad light with India 264/4 and with a bad injury to Pant maybe honours even?  I was looking forward to the start the next day’s play already.

A gloomy day two, England needed wickets and Jofra got one early but the Indian batsmen were difficult to dislodge before lunch at which point things were still well balanced.  Pant came out and had a go, India weren’t scoring quickly enough to worry England.  After lunch Archer and Stokes combined to bowl India out, the last five wickets fell for 44 runs and the captain took his first 5 wicket haul for a very long time.  India had finished on 358 which was probably the kind of total England had in mind when we put them in at Birmingham.  How good this total actually was wouldn’t become evident until England had batted and they did so under clearing skies.  The opening stand of 166 seemed to suggest India hadn’t got enough.  Duckett and Crawley both fell a few runs short of a ton but England lost no more wickets to finish the day in control on 225/2.  For the fan one of the more comfortable days of Test Cricket this year.

The third day was as close to easy listening as it gets for an England supporter.  Apart from a few minutes after lunch when a couple of wickets fell and it was possible that maybe the door might open for India.  The rest of the day England just accumulated runs and put overs into the Indian bowlers legs.  Five of the top six passed seventy with Root making 150 and we finished with Stokes 77 not out.  Brook played another terrible shot and will hopefully learn his lesson.  India had their worst day of the tour, with the wheels if not coming off, definitely starting to wobble.  In fact, starting with the toss, the first three days of this match have gone how I and presumably the England team, expected Edgbaston would.  At the end of the day England lead by 186 runs with three wickets in hand.

Saturday started with a bang, England pushed on, led by Stokes who made 141 we were finally all out for 669, a 300+ lead.  There was time for a couple of overs before lunch and Woakes hit them with a double wicket maiden!  I was thinking we’ll win this today.  But Rahul and Gill got together and stayed together and ground it out with an old school Test partnership and the day fizzled out for this England fan.  But well played India 174/2 at the close, I didn’t see that coming.

This stubborn, defiant batting continued into the last day which felt tense for a while but as India smothered everything so this eased.  Occasionally a wicket fell which gave me the flutters again but the second new ball was wasted with spin and in the end the game drifted away into a draw.  You can’t fault Carse for effort but he went wicketless in the match and you can’t criticise Dawson for his control but he only took one.  Fair play to India though, this is some team.

Long before the end I’d given it up for the inevitable draw and I enjoyed watching England women’s football team retain their title of European champions.  The team showed a lot of fight to make the final and to be fair had a little luck in winning the final but we’ll take that.  It has to be noticed that almost all Test matches are won by the team that plays the best cricket but the best team doesn’t always win in football.

No comments:

Post a Comment